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Chapter 02 - Labor Supply

CHAPTER 2

2-1. How many hours will a person allocate to leisure activities if her indifference curves
between consumption and goods are concave to the origin?

A worker will either work all available time or will not work at all. As drawn in Figure A, point B
is preferred to points A and C. Thus, the worker chooses not to enter the labor market. As drawn
in Figure B, point C is preferred to both points A and B. Thus, the worker chooses not to consume
any leisure and to work all available time.

Figure A Figure B

Goods Goods

C
C
U1
U1
A A
U0 U0

B B
Hours of Leisure Hours of Leisure

2-2. What is the effect of an increase in the price of market goods on a worker’s reservation
wage, probability of entering the labor force, and hours of work?

Suppose the price of market goods increases from p to p and the person’s non-labor income is V.
If she chooses not to work, she can purchase V/p units of consumption after the price change,
whereas she could have consumed V/p units of consumption prior to the price increase. Thus, her
endowment point has moved from E to E in Figure A (on the next page). Under normal
conditions, including that leisure is a normal good, the indifference curve is steeper as we move
up a vertical line, indicating that the slope of the indifference curve is steeper at E than at E.
Thus, an increase in the price of goods lowers the reservation wage and makes the person more
likely to work.

[Figure A is on the next page.]

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Chapter 02 - Labor Supply

Figure A.
Goods

E
V/p

E
V/p

0 T Hours of
Leisure

To simplify the illustration of the effect on hours of work, assume for simplicity that V = 0. The
increase in the price of goods shifts the budget line from FE to GE in Figure B below, moving the
worker from P to point R. This shift induces both an income effect and a substitution effect. The
price increase lowers the person’s real wage rate, increasing the demand for leisure and leading to
fewer hours of work (the substitution effect). This substitution effect is illustrated by the move
from point P to point Q in Figure B. The price increase also reduces the worker’s wealth,
lowering the demand for leisure and leading to more hours of work (the income effect). This
income effect is illustrated by the move from Q to R. As drawn the income effect dominates the
substitution effect and the price increase lowers the demand for leisure and increases hours of
work. It is, of course, possible for the substitution effect to dominate the income effect (not
pictured), so that hours of work decreases. Thus, without further restrictions on preferences, an
increase in the price of market goods has an ambiguous effect on hours worked.

Figure B.

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Chapter 02 - Labor Supply

Goods

P
Q

G R

E
T
Hours of Leisure

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Chapter 02 - Labor Supply

2-3. Tom earns $15 per hour for up to 40 hours of work each week. He is paid $30 per hour
for every hour in excess of 40. Tom faces a 20 percent tax rate and pays $4 per hour in child
care expenses for each hour he works. Tom receives $80 in child support payments each
week. There are 168 hours in the week. Graph Tom’s weekly budget line.

 If Tom does not work, he leisures for 168 hours and consumes $80.
 For all hours Tom works up to his first 40, his after-tax and after-child care wage equals
(80 percent of $15) – $4 = $8 per hour. Thus, if he works for 40 hours, he will be able to
leisure for 128 hours and consume $80 + $8(40) = $400.
 For all hours Tom works over 40, his after-tax and after-child care wage equals (80
percent of $30) – $4 = $20. Thus, if he works for 168 hours (128 hours at the overtime
wage), he will not leisure at all, but he will consume $80 + $8(40) + $20(128) = $2,960.

Tom’s weekly budget line is pictured below.

Dollars of
Consumption
$2,960

$400
$80

128 168 Hours of Leisure

2-4. Cindy gains utility from consumption C and leisure L. The most leisure she can
consume in any given week is 168 hours. Her utility function is U(C, L) = C  L. This
functional form implies that Cindy’s marginal rate of substitution is C / L. Cindy receives
$630 each week from her great-grandmother–regardless of how much Cindy works. What
is Cindy’s reservation wage?

The reservation wage is the MRS when not working at all. Thus, wRES = MRS at maximum leisure
equals
C/L = $630/168 = $3.75.

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Chapter 02 - Labor Supply

2-5. You can either take a bus or drive your car to work. A bus pass costs $5 per week,
whereas driving your car to work costs $60 weekly (parking, tolls, gas, etc.). You spend
half-an-hour less on a one-way trip in your car than on a bus. How would you prefer to
travel to work if your wage rate is $10 per hour? Will you change your preferred mode of
transportation if your wage rate rises to $20 per hour? Assume you work five days a week
and time spent riding on a bus or driving a car does not directly enter your utility.

Taking a bus will save you $55 a week, but it will cost you 5 hours of leisure time due to the
longer commute. Since the price of leisure is equal to the wage rate, the monetary value of the
time lost is $50 when the hourly wage is $10 and $100 when the hourly wage is $20. Therefore, it
makes sense for you to take a bus to work if you are paid $10 per hour, but you will switch to
driving your car if your wage increases to $20 per hour.

2-6. Shelly’s preferences for consumption and leisure can be expressed as

U(C, L) = (C – 200)  (L – 80 ).

This utility function implies that Shelly’s marginal utility of leisure is C – 200 and her
marginal utility of consumption is L – 80. There are 168 hours in the week available to split
between work and leisure. Shelly earns $5 per hour after taxes. She also receives $320 worth
of welfare benefits each week regardless of how much she works.

(a) Graph Shelly’s budget line.

If Shelly does not work, she leisures for 168 hours and consumes $320. If she does not leisure at
all, she consumes $320 + $5(168) = $1,160. Shelly’s weekly budget line, therefore, is pictured
below.

Dollars of
Consumption
$1,160

$320

168 Hours of Leisure

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Chapter 02 - Labor Supply

(b) What is Shelly’s marginal rate of substitution when L = 100 and she is on her budget
line?

If Shelly leisures for 100 hours, she works for 68 hours and consumes $320 + $5(68) = $660.
Thus, her MRS when doing this is:

MU L C  200 660  200 460


MRS      $23 .
MUc L  80 100  80 20

(c) What is Shelly’s reservation wage?

The reservation wage is defined as the MRS when working no hours. When working no hours,
Shelly leisures for 168 hours and consumes $320. Thus,

320  200 120


w RES    $1.36 .
168  80 88

(d) Find Shelly’s optimal amount of consumption and leisure.

Her optimal mix of consumption and leisure is found by setting her MRS equal to her wage and
solving for hours of leisure given the budget line: C = 320 + 5(168 – L).

w  MRS

C  200
5
L  80

320  5(168  L)  200


5
L  80

5L  400  960  5 L

L  136.

Thus, Shelly will choose to leisure 136 hours, work 32 hours, and consume $320 + $5(32) = $480
each week.

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Chapter 02 - Labor Supply

2-7. Explain why a lump sum government transfer can entice some workers to stop working
(and entices no one to start working) while the earned income tax credit can entice some
people who otherwise would not work to start working (and entices no one to stop working).

A lump sum transfer is associated with an income effect but not a substitution effect, because it
doesn’t affect the wage rate. Thus, if leisure is a normal good, a lump sum transfer will likely
cause workers to work fewer hours (and certainly not cause them to work more hours) while
possibly enticing some workers to exit the labor force all together. On the other hand, the Earned
Income Tax Credit raises the effective wage of low-income workers by 40 percent (at least for the
poorest workers). Thus, someone who had not been working faces a wage that is 40 percent
higher than it otherwise was. This increase may be enough to encourage the person to start
working. For example, if a worker’s reservation wage is $10.00 per hour but the only job she can
find pays $8.00 per hour, she will not work. Under the earned income tax credit, however, the
worker views this same job as paying $11.20 per hour, which exceeds her reservation wage.
Furthermore, the EITC cannot encourage a worker to exit the labor force, as the benefits of the
EITC are received only by workers.

2-8. In 1999, 4,860 TANF recipients were asked how many hours they worked in the
previous week. In 2000, 4,392 of these recipients were again subject to the same TANF rules
and were again asked their hours of work during the previous week. The remaining 468
individuals were randomly assigned to a “Negative Income Tax” (NIT) experiment which
gave out financial incentives for welfare recipients to work and were subject to its rules.
Like the other group, they were asked about their hours of work during the previous week.
The data from the experiment are contained in the table below.

Number of
Recipients Who Total Hours Of
Total Worked At Some Work By All
Number Of Time in the Survey Recipients in the
Recipients Week Survey Week
1999 2000 1999 2000
TANF 4,392 1,217 1,568 15,578 20,698
NIT 468 131 213 1,638 2,535
Total 4,860 1,348 1,781 17,216 23,233

(a) What effect did the NIT experiment have on the employment rate of public assistance
recipients? Develop a standard difference-in-differences table to support your answer.

Employment Rate
1999 2000 Diff Diff-in-Diff
TANF 27.7% 35.7% 8.0%
NIT 28.0% 45.5% 17.5% 9.5%

The NIT increased the probability of employment by 9.5 percentage points. Note that the percent
numbers are found by dividing the “Number of Recipient” columns (2 nd and 3rd of original) by the
Number of Recipients column (1st of original).

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Chapter 02 - Labor Supply

(b) What effect did the NIT experiment have on the weekly hours worked of public
assistance recipients who worked positive hours during the survey week? Develop a
standard difference-in-differences table to support your answer.

Weekly Hours Worked Per Working Person


1999 2000 Diff Diff-in-Diff
TANF 12.8 13.2 0.4
NIT 12.5 11.9 -0.6 -1.0

The NIT decreased weekly hours worked, of those working, by 1 hour. Note that the average
weekly hours of work per persons is found by the “Total Hours of Work” columns (4 th and 5th of
original) by the Number of Recipients column (1st of original).

2-9. Consider two workers with identical preferences, Phil and Bill. Both workers have the
same life cycle wage path in that they face the same wage at every age, and they know what
their future wages will be. Leisure and consumption are both normal goods.

(a) Compare the life cycle path of hours of work between the two workers if Bill receives a
one-time, unexpected inheritance at the age of 35.

Because the workers have the same life cycle wage path and the same preferences, they will have
the same life cycle path of hours of work up to the unexpected event. An inheritance provides an
income effect for Bill with no substitution effect, and thus, he will work fewer hours (or at least
not more hours) than Phil from the age of 35 forward.

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whole or part.
Chapter 02 - Labor Supply

Life Cycle Path of Hours Worked


Hours
Worked
After Age 35:
Before Age 35:
Phil Bill
Bill and Phil

35 Age

(b) Compare the life cycle path of hours of work between the two workers if Bill had always
known he would receive (and, in fact, does receive) a one-time inheritance at the age of 35.

In this case, because the inheritance is fully anticipated, and because it offers the same income
effect with no substitution effect, Bill will work fewer hours (or at least not more hours) than Phil
over their entire work lives. (The graph is on the next page.)

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whole or part.
Chapter 02 - Labor Supply

Life Cycle Path of Hours Worked


Hours
Worked

Phil Bill

35 Age

2-10. Under current law, most Social Security recipients do not pay federal or state income
taxes on their Social Security benefits. Suppose the government proposes to tax these
benefits at the same rate as other types of income. What is the impact of the proposed tax on
the optimal retirement age?

Suppose social security benefits are the only pension benefits available to a retiree. The tax,
therefore, can be interpreted as a cut in pension benefits. The cut in pension benefits shifts the
budget line from FH to FE in the figure below, shifting the worker from point P to point R. (Note
that FE and FH are both downward sloping, indicating that total retirement consumption is
greater the later in life one retires.) This shift generates both income and substitution effects.
Both of these effects, however, work in the same direction. First, the tax reduces the retiree’s
wealth, reducing her demand for leisure, and leading her to retire later (the income effect). At the
same time, the tax reduces the “wage” that retirees receive when retired, effectively increasing (in
relative terms) the wage they earn while working and generating a substitution effect that leads to
more work hours, thus further delaying retirement. Under normal conditions, therefore, a tax on
pension benefits will reduce the optimal retirement age (i.e., workers will delay retirement).

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Chapter 02 - Labor Supply

Consumption
During U1
Retirement F

P
R
H
U0

20 Years of Retirement

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Chapter 02 - Labor Supply

2-11. A worker plans to retire at the age of 65, at which time he will start collecting his
retirement benefits. Then there is a sudden change in the forecast of inflation when the
worker is 63 years old. In particular, inflation is now predicted to be higher than it had
been expected so that the average price level of market goods and wages is now expected to
be higher. What effect does this announcement have on the person’s preferred retirement
age:

(a) if retirement benefits are fully adjusted for inflation?

There will be no effect on the person’s retirement decision if retirement benefits are fully adjusted
for inflation as nothing changes in the person’s calculations in real terms: the relative magnitudes
of prices, wages and retirement benefits are the same with or without inflation. The person faces
the same choice, so his decision does not change.

(b) if retirement benefits are not fully adjusted for inflation?

If retirement benefits are not adjusted for inflation, the purchasing power of retirement benefits
falls. If the person does not retire, he can enjoy the same consumption as he would without
inflation as wages are assumed to fully adjust for inflation. If he retires at 65, his benefits are
worth less in real terms (they can buy him less consumption) with inflation than without, so he
cannot afford the same consumption path as before. Hence, his choice set over the years of
retirement and consumption lies below the original (pre-inflation) choice set except at one point
—where he does not retire at all. Thus, as long as leisure (i.e., years of retirement) and
consumption are normal goods, the income and substitution effects both lead to the individual
retiring later in life.

2-12. Presently, there is a minimum and maximum social security benefit paid to retirees.
Between these two bounds, a retiree’s benefit level depends on how much she contributed to
the system over her work life. Suppose Social Security was changed so that everyone aged
65 or older was paid $12,000 per year regardless of how much she earned over her working
life or whether she continued to work after the age of 65. How would this likely affect hours
worked of retirees?

Labor force participation is likely greatest for those retirees whose social security income is low
(below $12,000 per year). Thus, the change in benefits offers these retirees a pure (positive)
income effect. These retirees should reduce their hours worked if not leave the labor force all
together after the age of 65.

In contrast, the policy change offers all retirees who would have earned more than $12,000 per
month a pure (negative) income effect. These retirees will become more likely to work, or, if
already working, more likely to work more hours after the age of 65.

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Chapter 02 - Labor Supply

2-13. Over the last 100 years, real household income and standards of living have increased
substantially in the United States. At the same time, the total fertility rate, the average
number of children born to a woman during her lifetime, has fallen in the United States
from about three children per woman in the early twentieth century to about two children
per woman in the early twenty-first century. Does this suggest that children are inferior
goods?

The conventional wisdom (and empirical evidence) suggests that children are normal goods.
Economically, children are a lot more expensive today than they were 100 years ago (consider
education, housing, clothing, entertainment expenses). Children also produce less for the
household in the 21st century than they did 100 years ago.

The biology/evolution argument is that infant mortality rates have also fallen dramatically over
the last 100 years, so a woman needs to have fewer children to be more confident that some of her
children will reach adulthood.

2-14. Consider a person who can work up to 80 hours each week at a pre-tax wage of $20
per hour but faces a constant 20% payroll tax. Under these conditions, the worker
maximizes her utility by choosing to work 50 hours each week. The government proposes a
negative income tax whereby everyone is given $300 each week and anyone can supplement
her income further by working. To pay for the negative income tax, the payroll tax rate will
be increased to 50%.

(a) On a single graph, draw the worker’s original budget line and her budget line under the
negative income tax.

Under the original scenario, let I be total weekly income, L be hours of leisure, and H be hours
worked. The worker’s after-tax wage rate is 80% of $20 which equals $16 per hour. Thus, when
the worker works all 80 hours in the week, she earns $16 x 80 = $1,280 and her budget line is
described by I = 1280 – 16L. Notice that when L = 80, the worker earns $0. And when L = 30,
the worker earns $16 × 50 = $800.

Under the negative income tax, the worker is given $300 each week, but now her after-tax wage
rate is 50% of $20 which equals $10 per hour. In this case, when the worker works all 80 hours
in the week, she earns $10 × 80 + $300 = $1,100 and her budget line is properly described by
I = 1100 – 10L. Notice that when L = 80, the worker receives $300. And when L = 30, the worker
receives $300 + $10 x 50 = $800.

The two budget lines for both scenarios are graphed on the next page.

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whole or part.
Chapter 02 - Labor Supply

Weekly Budget Lines

Weekly $1,280
Income
$1,100 Original Scenario

$800

Negative Income Tax

$300

30 80 Hours of Leisure

(b) Show that the worker will choose to work fewer hours if the negative income tax is
adopted.

To answer this question, one needs to find where the budget lines intersect. Setting the budget
lines equal and solving for L reveals that the budget lines intersect at L = 30. Thus, the
indifference curve that is tangent to the original budget line at L = 30 must not be tangent to the
budget line under the negative income tax (because L = 30 was the optimal choice without the
negative income tax). In particular, the worker’s original indifference curve must be below the
new budget line to the right of L = 30. Therefore, when faced with the negative income tax, the
worker will move in that direction, which requires her to increase L (hours of leisure) and
concurrently decrease H (hours of work).

(c) Will the worker’s utility be greater under the negative income tax?

In this particular case, the worker’s utility will increase under the negative income tax because
she could continue to leisure 30 hours each week and receive $800 (which was her outcome
before the negative income tax) but instead the worker decides to leisure more (and consume
less). This change in behavior must increase her utility.

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Chapter 02 - Labor Supply

2-15. The absolute value of the slope of the consumption-leisure budget line is the after-tax
wage, w. Suppose some workers earn w for up to 40 hours of work each week, and then earn
2w for any hours worked thereafter (called overtime). Other workers may earn w for up to
40 hours of work each week, and then only earn 0.5w thereafter as working more than 40
hours requires getting a second job which pays an hourly wage less than their primary job.
Both types of workers experience a “kink” in their consumption-leisure budget line.

(a) Graph in general terms the budget line for each type of worker.

Weekly Budget Lines

Weekly
Income

The wage increases (to 2w) for


hours of work in excess of 40.

The wage falls


(to 0.5w) for Both face a wage of w for 40 hours
hours of work
in excess of 40.

T - 40 T Hours of Leisure

(b) Which type of worker is likely to work up to the point of the kink, and which
type of worker is likely to choose a consumption-leisure bundle far away from the
kink?

The worker who experiences a decrease in her wage after working 40 hours is (more) likely to
work exactly 40 hours as the marginal benefit of working experiences a negative jump down at
this point.

In contrast, the worker who experiences an overtime premium after working 40 hours is (more)
likely to not work exactly 40 hours. Because of the overtime premium, once the worker hits 40
hours of work, the worker experiences a positive jump up in the marginal benefit of working. Put
differently, this worker may opt to only work 20 or 30 hours, but if she finds herself having
worked 40 hours because the T – 40th hour of leisure was not as valuable as w, then it is very
likely that she will also find that the T – 41st hour of leisure is not as valuable as 2w, and therefore
she works the 41st hour (and possibly quite more).

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